The case for charisma
Charismatic animals get all the love. 3
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Eric de Place is a senior research at Sightline Institute, a Seattle-based sustainability think tank, working on promoting smart policy decisions for the Pacific Northwest. Visit http://daily.sightline.org/daily_score to read more on Sightline’s blog.
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Stentor Posted 3:04 am
12 May 2005
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Biodiversivist Posted 2:40 am
13 May 2005
From there, I would look at newts and salamanders. They also tend to be good environmental indicators. You will not find frogs or newts in Bitterlake, Greenlake, Sivlerlake or any other urban lake. With urban sprawl, all lakes are becoming urban ones, so a look at Seattle's lakes is a look into the future of most lakes in the area. A handful of introduced frog species can be found along the slew, and in the arboretum along Lake Washington, but that is it. When these species disappear from around a body of water, what you have left is a runoff containment pond.
Lizards. There are none in Seattle because there is nothing for them to eat, and the ubiquitous house cats eat them. Again, where urban sprawl goes so go our pet cats and insecticides.
Deer and elk are happy eating our ornamental yard plants and gardens. Wolves are happy eating them, and bears eat grass, berries, carrion, and garbage. They could all exist quite happily in our urban subdivisions if we would allow it.
Monitoring the charismatic species is no way to monitor the health of an ecosystem.
http://saveourbiodiversity.com
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Japhet Posted 4:53 pm
13 May 2005
Jay Els
Educate, Motivate and Bring About Change. http://www.ran.org
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